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Jul 3, 2011
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india is opposite. it's only mirror ifed in two periods, when the moguls or the british invaded, none of them were able to extend their rule. so the fact that india is a democracy i don't believe has deep historical roots. the fact it's not chinese-style dictatorship. nobody has ever been able to rule india in that kind of authoritarian fashion. indian society is way too tough. it's organized teen cast, you know, village associations and very powerful religious groups, all of which have resisted any political effort to, you know, to dominate. the final thing, i mention that the eurocentric accounts of modernization don't understand how peculiar european modernization is. i think that's important to remember. when we try to modernize through development assistance a country in the third world today. how was european peculiar? the exist from kinship is not done by a powerful state that demanded that people have allegiance to it. it was done by the catholic church. the church at the end set rules. they for
india is opposite. it's only mirror ifed in two periods, when the moguls or the british invaded, none of them were able to extend their rule. so the fact that india is a democracy i don't believe has deep historical roots. the fact it's not chinese-style dictatorship. nobody has ever been able to rule india in that kind of authoritarian fashion. indian society is way too tough. it's organized teen cast, you know, village associations and very powerful religious groups, all of which have...
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Jul 16, 2011
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india will be in the same position, though my estimate, india's at high-growth rate somewhere around 13 years, you know, behind china in the course of this. i will play one thing that josh feldman and i were talking about the totally new thought that comes posted the book. that i have start to think about it is based upon, on the basis of conversations in asia recently. so let me say it in two ways. first of all it's pretty clear those of you who know industrial organization, you know that we measure concentration and industry it's a kind of way of thinking about how our galapagos take it will be. to share the top two, the share of the top four, the index and a bunch of others. and we know i think it's obvious the global economy is be concentrated because of the smaller entities are growing quickly. why didn't realize until recently his that pattern will reverse in about two years. because of the size of high-growth part of the global economy. i maybe wrong on on the timing but we are going on a 15 year time horizon be in a position in which the global economy is dominated by for eco
india will be in the same position, though my estimate, india's at high-growth rate somewhere around 13 years, you know, behind china in the course of this. i will play one thing that josh feldman and i were talking about the totally new thought that comes posted the book. that i have start to think about it is based upon, on the basis of conversations in asia recently. so let me say it in two ways. first of all it's pretty clear those of you who know industrial organization, you know that we...
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Jul 17, 2011
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and this man is like, what condi was to india, this man was to pakistan. but this is another question at the heart of the book. why did this incredibly powerful islamic political leader invited to jewish girl that he had been corresponding with for a year to live with them as his daughter. i mean, here he had nine children, but is inviting yet another woman to his house in pakistan. so it's one thing to sort of go back and forth as to who marion gmail it is, but then you need the historical context. where was pakistan at that time? influence among us, this book is also a book about america and pakistan, america and islam. so you know, i don't want to sort of loose sight of those aspects of the book and the fine-grained because marionette symbolizes a vehicle for a lot of these meditations. but as to the question of what i decided to do with her letters, i felt it was important to have million of the vehicle for the reader to experience her letters with immediacy, and around words rather than me paraphrasing them or, you know, saying welcome and marion says
and this man is like, what condi was to india, this man was to pakistan. but this is another question at the heart of the book. why did this incredibly powerful islamic political leader invited to jewish girl that he had been corresponding with for a year to live with them as his daughter. i mean, here he had nine children, but is inviting yet another woman to his house in pakistan. so it's one thing to sort of go back and forth as to who marion gmail it is, but then you need the historical...
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Jul 11, 2011
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he'd been thinking about british empires in india and stuff like that. and so there was this social impact. and at the time, i think what we saw was a very, very deep impact on our society by these darwinian ideas. everything from national socialist and throughout argued the neoclassic economics have thumb imprint of darwinian thinking, particularly as mediated through the likes of herbert. so as i was beginning to look at the process that created us, and we read dolphins chain can we read darwin and perhaps we were selfish shortsighted, ruthless entities forged by an amoral and utterly cruel process. this give me hope it may not necessarily be the idea. i at the age of 90. at the age of 80, he was still writing in the fact i would argue his most important work was published in 1904 and his eighth decade and that's the title page they arecoming to study the results of scientific research in relation to the unity or plurality of worlds. very, very strange title and deed. but what this book really is is a summary of wallace's understand a note what the evo
he'd been thinking about british empires in india and stuff like that. and so there was this social impact. and at the time, i think what we saw was a very, very deep impact on our society by these darwinian ideas. everything from national socialist and throughout argued the neoclassic economics have thumb imprint of darwinian thinking, particularly as mediated through the likes of herbert. so as i was beginning to look at the process that created us, and we read dolphins chain can we read...
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Jul 17, 2011
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i won't say everything, but basically his ideas grew out of the india's, you know, trying to get rid of the british empire, and he was born in 1901. for awhile there was a kind of muslim, indue unity under gandhi and his movement, but he gradually moved away from that, and he began to articulate, and he was really one of the first people to articulate this idea of an us lamic state based entirely on the law which we hear a lot about now with egypt and the muslim brotherhood and deeply influenced by his writings on his idea of an islamic institution. also one who translated the work into persian for iran, so he was a voice of huge authority in this not only in his part of the world, but also in the middle east, and, you know, he was going to saudi arabia. he was sub subsidizing and patronizing the islam, the political party founded in india, the first islamic party and continues to be a force in pakistan. there's a lot of little offshoots, but basically, these are the parties through which the jihads are organized and sent off to fight either in the northwest territories or in afghani
i won't say everything, but basically his ideas grew out of the india's, you know, trying to get rid of the british empire, and he was born in 1901. for awhile there was a kind of muslim, indue unity under gandhi and his movement, but he gradually moved away from that, and he began to articulate, and he was really one of the first people to articulate this idea of an us lamic state based entirely on the law which we hear a lot about now with egypt and the muslim brotherhood and deeply...
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Jul 9, 2011
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very influential in the -- people in india. the government banned the use, but it had almost no impact. that would feed it to the cal. it took a much deeper engagement to get this out of cattle. what happened is a number of indian ngos now offering alternative subsidies for alternative drugs to indian farmers in an attempt to win the off wall this as a veterinary medicine. slowly the vultures are returning, but it will take many, many decades for that to happen. again, just in the subcontinent been you have a systemic shift in the waning people deal with a particular dangerous chemical even though there are very poor him. obviously in that country what it. a way that is leading to the recovery of a species that is vital to survival. i should say, it wasn't just some the passing the word suffering. the amount of dogs. and there were very serious concerns about the outbreak of rabies epidemic as a result. everything is connected to everything else resource exploitation, another great threat to humanity. two examples that they jus
very influential in the -- people in india. the government banned the use, but it had almost no impact. that would feed it to the cal. it took a much deeper engagement to get this out of cattle. what happened is a number of indian ngos now offering alternative subsidies for alternative drugs to indian farmers in an attempt to win the off wall this as a veterinary medicine. slowly the vultures are returning, but it will take many, many decades for that to happen. again, just in the subcontinent...
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Jul 9, 2011
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india has been axles which are being hunted down, you have native indians in brazil. even in afghanistan they call the areas where they're doing all the bombing the tribal areas. i want you to speak to the fact that indigenous people around the world are being if under attack. er attack. and is there some way we can get this out into the press so they can understand that this should be stopped immediately? >> guest: well, what you're saying was true. >> guest: what you are saying is true. i was just in norway and the performance with a nsga woman in india under attack by the burmese. i think what it is, there's always the land hunger and indigenous people are vulnerable. there are resources that others want. for instance, in i think it is coaster rica, covered the land and animals and oil. so what we think about is the oil in the gulf. we don't realize that is happening in other regions as well. it should be published. it should be in papers. it is very difficult to have that information. one book that i read was by hawkins. i am sure you remember him from long ago. o
india has been axles which are being hunted down, you have native indians in brazil. even in afghanistan they call the areas where they're doing all the bombing the tribal areas. i want you to speak to the fact that indigenous people around the world are being if under attack. er attack. and is there some way we can get this out into the press so they can understand that this should be stopped immediately? >> guest: well, what you're saying was true. >> guest: what you are saying is...
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Jul 10, 2011
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also involved in many other radical causes of the day, a strong supporter of independence for ireland, india, before the war she was very active in the women's suffrage movement and has gone to prison four times. in this article, the writer made one passing comment, one sentence where she said naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother and i gave his name. sir john french which i immediately recognized as commander in chief on the western front. i thought that will be a relationship that will be interesting to write about. it was. because the brother and sister of diametrically opposite views were nonetheless were personally quite close. she was eight years older and she was the beloved little brother and taught him the alphabet. they remained in touch throughout the war and saw each other frequently. they stopped speaking to each other only win in 1918 the british government sent him to ireland to be viceroy in charge of suppressing the nationalist revolt against english role. she went to ireland to work for the i.r.a. and stopped speaking at that point*. that gave me t
also involved in many other radical causes of the day, a strong supporter of independence for ireland, india, before the war she was very active in the women's suffrage movement and has gone to prison four times. in this article, the writer made one passing comment, one sentence where she said naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother and i gave his name. sir john french which i immediately recognized as commander in chief on the western front. i thought that will be a...
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Jul 2, 2011
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she made a semiofficial trip you might recall to pakistan and india and she was a huge hit. she loved this horse and many photographs you see of her from that time and her time in the white house and on her farm that she ranted and built a farm house right at the end of the presidency in northern virginia so often times when you see her writing she is writing this horse that the pakistani president gave to her. she had thrown for him an amazing state dinner in the springtime and early summer of 1961 at mt. vernon. in fact she had everyone meet and catch a boat to go down the potomac river take an evening cruise and arrive at mount vernon and had beautiful marquees set up at mount vernon and had a beautiful outdoor lovely dinner with music for the president of pakistan and all those invited to state dinners. it still sets the upper bar for amazing state dinners that jacqueline kennedy had. this political symbolism i want to say something about. it taps into emotional and moral and psychological feeling. if jacqueline kennedy is still in our consciousness that is why. she taps
she made a semiofficial trip you might recall to pakistan and india and she was a huge hit. she loved this horse and many photographs you see of her from that time and her time in the white house and on her farm that she ranted and built a farm house right at the end of the presidency in northern virginia so often times when you see her writing she is writing this horse that the pakistani president gave to her. she had thrown for him an amazing state dinner in the springtime and early summer of...
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Jul 5, 2011
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a strong supporter of independence for ireland, for india. before the war she had been very active in the women's suffrage movement and had gone to prison for times. and in this article about her, the writer just made one passing comment, one sentence where he said, naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother. and it gave his name. sir john french, which i immediately recognized recognized as commander-in-chief on the western front. so i thought that is going to be a relationship which fully interesting to write about. and indeed it was. because this brother and sister of diametrically opposite views were nonetheless personally quite close. she was eight years older than he was. he was her beloved little brother. she taught him the alphabet when he was small. they were banned in touch throughout the war. they saw each other frequently. they stopped speaking to each other only when, in 1918, the british government sent him to ireland to be viceroy of ireland in charge of suppressing the nationalist revolt against english ru
a strong supporter of independence for ireland, for india. before the war she had been very active in the women's suffrage movement and had gone to prison for times. and in this article about her, the writer just made one passing comment, one sentence where he said, naturally these activities were deeply upsetting to her brother. and it gave his name. sir john french, which i immediately recognized recognized as commander-in-chief on the western front. so i thought that is going to be a...
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Jul 10, 2011
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as a counterweight to india military power. all those groups have operational connections to each other now. the experts believe that they would be, and are inclined to plan operations against the west, both at home and abroad. so the question becomes then how vulnerable is the pakistani arsenal? how might someone need a nuclear bomb? there's several ways. you could have a rogue officer come you have a clandestine sale of materials which a.q. khan, the father of the nuclear program of pakistan before a number of years. you have a rogue officer taking over nuclear installation, or you can have my scenario where a bomb in transit from its secure facility the front lines in a nuclear, storm because that's where it's most one of the. you're the combination of weapons, a country which is hostile, a security service which has ties to jihadists. jihadists have been indulged on the establishment military and security, and you have something that is really a worth a nuclear terrorism i nuclear terrorism i would suggest one the great nat
as a counterweight to india military power. all those groups have operational connections to each other now. the experts believe that they would be, and are inclined to plan operations against the west, both at home and abroad. so the question becomes then how vulnerable is the pakistani arsenal? how might someone need a nuclear bomb? there's several ways. you could have a rogue officer come you have a clandestine sale of materials which a.q. khan, the father of the nuclear program of pakistan...
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Jul 23, 2011
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educated workforce and if they can't get those college-educated employees their competitors in china and india and singapore and other countries can. and believe me they are producing more college graduates. this is a bleak future but it does not have to be hopeless. there's a tendency even within our community to throw up our hands at the challenge to regard large numbers of low-income children of color as the on hope. i am here to say not only that there is hope but there are solutions. take the challenge of helping low income children of color go to college and stay through graduation. for more than a decade unc and a bill and melinda gates foundation have partnered on the scholars program. each year this program awards good through graduation scholarships to 1,000 low-income students of color. african-americans and hispanics and american indians and after more than a decade after granting 14,000 of these scholarships gates scholars have a five your graduation rate of 88%, double the number of non students of color. a six your graduation rate of 90%. much higher than the overall national gr
educated workforce and if they can't get those college-educated employees their competitors in china and india and singapore and other countries can. and believe me they are producing more college graduates. this is a bleak future but it does not have to be hopeless. there's a tendency even within our community to throw up our hands at the challenge to regard large numbers of low-income children of color as the on hope. i am here to say not only that there is hope but there are solutions. take...
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Jul 25, 2011
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-- relationship, the transatlantic is enormously where we live in a time where china and brazil and india the galloping economies are the biggest markets in the world. but i like to start off to tell the audiences that today, in the 800 million people of the indicted states and european union produced almost two-thirds of the world's economic output. $14 trillion of sales are generated by these two economies. they employ 4 million people just as europeans do. european investment contributes 10% of new york gdp. when the yorker out of 20 has of job because of the investment from the european union. that leaves the ultimate prize because these two regions are two of the few in the world that really understand what the position of the individual is in society and in government. three down. all of the things that we take for granted are ingrained in the dna. i would submit to you that keeping the relationship strong is extremely important. that is where but i started to think about nato where it is coming from our headed i thought this is not working because it is that relationship that is st
-- relationship, the transatlantic is enormously where we live in a time where china and brazil and india the galloping economies are the biggest markets in the world. but i like to start off to tell the audiences that today, in the 800 million people of the indicted states and european union produced almost two-thirds of the world's economic output. $14 trillion of sales are generated by these two economies. they employ 4 million people just as europeans do. european investment contributes 10%...
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Jul 24, 2011
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and if they can't get those college educated employees, their competitors in china and in india and in singapore and other countries can. and believe me, they are producing more college graduates. this is a bleak future. but it does not have to be hopeless. there is a tendency even within our computer to throw up our hands at the college to regard large number of low-income children of color as beyond hope. i'm here to say not only that there is hope, but there are solutions. take the challenge of helping low-income children of color go to college and stay through graduation. for more than a decade now, uncf and the bill and melinda gates foundation have partnered on the gates millennium scholars. this program awards to 1,000 low-income students of color, african-american,, hispanics, ad after more than a decade of growning 14,000 of these. gates scholar has a five year graduation rate of 88%. double the number of nonstudents of color. and a six year graduation rate of over 90%. much higher than the overall national graduation rate and comparable to the graduation rate from the student
and if they can't get those college educated employees, their competitors in china and in india and in singapore and other countries can. and believe me, they are producing more college graduates. this is a bleak future. but it does not have to be hopeless. there is a tendency even within our computer to throw up our hands at the college to regard large number of low-income children of color as beyond hope. i'm here to say not only that there is hope, but there are solutions. take the challenge...
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Jul 24, 2011
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we live in a time where china and brazil and india and so on, the galloping economies are going to be the biggest markets in the world. but i always liked to start off by telling the audiences that today, today the 800 million people of the united states and the european union produced almost two-thirds of the world's economic output. $14 trillion in sales are generated by these two economies they employ 4 million people, just as many americans work for european firms as europeans do for american firms. european investment contributes 10% of new york's gdp. one new yorker out of 20 has a job or her job because of the investment from the european union. so that, to me, is the ultimate prize, the ultimate prize also because these two regions are two of the very few in the world there really understand what the position of an individual is in society and in government. freedom, all of those other things that we take for granted are ingrained in the dna on both sides. and so i would submit to you been keeping their relationship strong is extremely important. that is where tomorrow when i
we live in a time where china and brazil and india and so on, the galloping economies are going to be the biggest markets in the world. but i always liked to start off by telling the audiences that today, today the 800 million people of the united states and the european union produced almost two-thirds of the world's economic output. $14 trillion in sales are generated by these two economies they employ 4 million people, just as many americans work for european firms as europeans do for...
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Jul 4, 2011
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when he finally bought a home, he went to india and believed that people shouldn't owned property so when you started talking about, you know, the radical king, he was a true radical, and believed not in possessing personal property, but look he borrowed money from his daddy for taxes, and harry took out $100,000 policy life insurance on five kids each. if malcolm had a benefactor, if he had been los langston hughes, then he would have had a different perspective. as we deconstruct capital, the point of karl marx's capital, it didn't extent the value of capital because when the dude tried to marry his daughter, he said can you take care of her? marx said that. i i believe in ira, individual reparations accounts. [laughter] you can't give it to great, great, great grand pa, but you can redistribute wealth to people who inherit ideas, but it makes it undumb bent on us to press the argument forward and to tell the truth of the suffering of the masses who don't have the quandaries we have because they don't have a wage or a salary so when we deconstruct it, let's not talk about obliterat
when he finally bought a home, he went to india and believed that people shouldn't owned property so when you started talking about, you know, the radical king, he was a true radical, and believed not in possessing personal property, but look he borrowed money from his daddy for taxes, and harry took out $100,000 policy life insurance on five kids each. if malcolm had a benefactor, if he had been los langston hughes, then he would have had a different perspective. as we deconstruct capital, the...
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Jul 2, 2011
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many companies toured as far away as india, australia, china and as you remember from "the king and i," siam. the play was seen by more people than read the book, although the book it remained extremely popular. and in 1905 "the new york times" said the two most popular books in america are the bible and "uncle tom's cabin." and it kept up a very, very steady presence. the play was seen regularly until about the 1950s and then sporadically after that. there was recently a wonderful staging by alex roe last fall at the metropolitan playhouse in the village. now, in many of those earlier plays uncle tom was falsely presented as a stooped, obedient, old fool. and that's partly where the uncle tom stereotype came from. eva's death in those plays was frequently a syrupy scene in which the actress was hauled heavenward by rope or piano wire against the backdrop of angels and billowing clouds. one might think that such spectacle would defang stowe's revolutionary themes and turn "uncle tom's cabin" into a laughable piece of harmless entertainment, but actually this didn't happen. after all,
many companies toured as far away as india, australia, china and as you remember from "the king and i," siam. the play was seen by more people than read the book, although the book it remained extremely popular. and in 1905 "the new york times" said the two most popular books in america are the bible and "uncle tom's cabin." and it kept up a very, very steady presence. the play was seen regularly until about the 1950s and then sporadically after that. there was...
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Jul 4, 2011
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certainly, we will have long-term relations with india. relations with foreign countries is always enhanced by writing letters against them, in addition to positive things for them. the balance of power means that you do not make a unilateral unconditional commitment to any country. you understand we have to define interest in common, and it's always essential as a great about our lesser power. and you say we have other options. coming into a relationship with the power goes against the principle of a prudent foreign policy. how you condition our relationship with india? well, given the geography it's very hard. china appears to be next-door though it is an. it's very far away. the american relationship with pakistan is the only lever that is available. do we want a subcontinent under the domination of a single power, regardless of what it is? i think it's more of interest in united states have a relationship with a country that has an element of insecurity in it. so when we talk about a sophisticated foreign policy, it doesn't simply mean
certainly, we will have long-term relations with india. relations with foreign countries is always enhanced by writing letters against them, in addition to positive things for them. the balance of power means that you do not make a unilateral unconditional commitment to any country. you understand we have to define interest in common, and it's always essential as a great about our lesser power. and you say we have other options. coming into a relationship with the power goes against the...
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Jul 11, 2011
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a lot of us say one-child policy in china, you know, why so many more boys than girls in china and india and other places and we say, huh, that's funny, what's going to happen there but then we move on to another question. wa-marjah didn't move on. she said what does this mean there's so many missing girls. what's going to happen when these boys grow up and there's no one for them to marry? how will they create families? what will society be like and she has asked those questions both about the society and what's going to happen because of that, but she also went back and researched how did this happen? and some of it what we think we know about things like one-child policy but some of it has to do with zero population growth and an enthusiasm for population control that has had great unintended consequences and i think we'll surprise people. >> and that book is unnatural selection. right next to that, two books about some troubled nations. >> yes. dancing in the glory of monster about the congo by jason stearns -- our editorial director got this book in from actually a friend of jason's
a lot of us say one-child policy in china, you know, why so many more boys than girls in china and india and other places and we say, huh, that's funny, what's going to happen there but then we move on to another question. wa-marjah didn't move on. she said what does this mean there's so many missing girls. what's going to happen when these boys grow up and there's no one for them to marry? how will they create families? what will society be like and she has asked those questions both about the...
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Jul 5, 2011
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government and in the same vein, applying these european notions of conquest and discovery and describing india as a racist people that have inferior care to her, inferior religion and that the europeans were a superior civilization, basically notions that is that court in the 1820s saw blacks as also racially inferior indians in the same way. and while that racial attitude towards the blacks has been reversed now and rooted out of the lock, the same notion about indians remained in that it. there's a whole bunch of cases in that same line of judicial time that justified the absolute power of congress, you know, over indian tribes, persons and properties, the sanction of breaking the treaties unilaterally with impunity with the rulers in the entrance as if by unfettered guardianship, you know, without any judicial review, stamping out our religions are notions that really have no place in a moderate society that has much higher values. so we've come a long way under the law in federal indian law. we've had an incredible social movement, but this idea of the supreme court. back on those rights i
government and in the same vein, applying these european notions of conquest and discovery and describing india as a racist people that have inferior care to her, inferior religion and that the europeans were a superior civilization, basically notions that is that court in the 1820s saw blacks as also racially inferior indians in the same way. and while that racial attitude towards the blacks has been reversed now and rooted out of the lock, the same notion about indians remained in that it....
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Jul 3, 2011
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wanted to do is to substitute tennessee valley authority organization for the local government law to india if single one of the concept they wanted to deemphasized turned out to be vitally important and remanded important to this day how lawyers protect law and the supreme court applies it. so, as a prediction of what lawyers would need to know and i can add parenthetically every time you hear someone predicting one area of law will bloom in the future so we should train more and a mother would shrink ignore them because they are approximately always wrong back in the 70's they felt the energy law was going to bloom and it didn't and no one predicted the trademark licensing law was going to boom which it did and they predicted the services would bloom which they didn't and a divorce would shrink which it didn't i always ignore them, but it wasn't just of course a matter of prediction. oslo and mcdougal were being illogical about it and even as i will mention in a moment no one really adopted the program whole. they had a couple of influential atmospheric influences. one of them was that it
wanted to do is to substitute tennessee valley authority organization for the local government law to india if single one of the concept they wanted to deemphasized turned out to be vitally important and remanded important to this day how lawyers protect law and the supreme court applies it. so, as a prediction of what lawyers would need to know and i can add parenthetically every time you hear someone predicting one area of law will bloom in the future so we should train more and a mother...
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Jul 10, 2011
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the people would give the attacks in india as a counterweight to the military power. all those groups of operational connections now and the experts would be and are inclined to plan operations against the west both at home and abroad, so the question becomes then how vulnerable is the pakistani arsenal and how much would someone get a nuclear complex there's several ways. you could of the clandestine sale of materials which a.q., the father of the program for a number of years you could have a rogue officer take over the nuclear installation work you could have my scenario where the transit from the secured facilities to the front lines and the nuclear alert because that's where it's most vulnerable. so you have a combination of weapons, the country which is hostile, the security service which has ties to the jihadists and a lot of them have been indulged by the establishment and the security, and you have something that is a worry and i would suggest it was the great national security fears that we have. >> in your book you have osama bin laden as a character in the
the people would give the attacks in india as a counterweight to the military power. all those groups of operational connections now and the experts would be and are inclined to plan operations against the west both at home and abroad, so the question becomes then how vulnerable is the pakistani arsenal and how much would someone get a nuclear complex there's several ways. you could of the clandestine sale of materials which a.q., the father of the program for a number of years you could have a...
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Jul 5, 2011
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was looking for warm bodies, any bodies, to help set up and run network of new intelligence bases in india, burma and china, she immediately volunteered. she didn't care where she went as long as she got to go. there was a man shortage and the newly formed oss was woefully understaffed. it's important i think to remember that when you think of the oss, you generally think about the paramilitary and guerrilla operations. they get all the glory. you think of grainy images of agents parachuting behind enemy lines, but the fact of the matter is of the 13,000 employees, about 4500 of which were women, the vast majority spent their time writing reports, collecting and analyzing information, and planning missions. so the fact that many of the oss is very unorthodox activities could be conducted from behind a desk meant that women could be equally as effective. and so while the majority of women did remain in washington, helping to support the oss's far-flung missions, a very small percentage went overseas. and an even tiny percentage ever went into active operations. but the small percentage that
was looking for warm bodies, any bodies, to help set up and run network of new intelligence bases in india, burma and china, she immediately volunteered. she didn't care where she went as long as she got to go. there was a man shortage and the newly formed oss was woefully understaffed. it's important i think to remember that when you think of the oss, you generally think about the paramilitary and guerrilla operations. they get all the glory. you think of grainy images of agents parachuting...
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Jul 9, 2011
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. >> india, china, brazil and south africa. and they signed on to a thing called the copenhagen accord along with many other countries, including the united states. and under the accord those countries all pledged a certain emissions reduction target to be achieved by 2020. if you total up the pledges for emissions reductions under the accord, they get us about two-thirds of the way to where we need to be to avoid dangerous climate change. so we only need another third, right? you might say, well, they're just pledges. is anyone actually with doing mig? well, in fact, they are rather surprisingly. even the united states is doing things. your target here in this country is a 17% reduction by 2020. you're already at -9% as a result of a lot of initiatives that are not happening necessarily at the federal level, but at the state level as well. in a few months' time, we'll see the opening of the first large emissions trading scheme here in this country in california, adopts their ets. there are a number of government initiatives he
. >> india, china, brazil and south africa. and they signed on to a thing called the copenhagen accord along with many other countries, including the united states. and under the accord those countries all pledged a certain emissions reduction target to be achieved by 2020. if you total up the pledges for emissions reductions under the accord, they get us about two-thirds of the way to where we need to be to avoid dangerous climate change. so we only need another third, right? you might...
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Jul 4, 2011
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i was just in norway, and i did a performance with asami person and a woman from india. she's a naga, that's the name of their indigenous nation under attack by the burmese, and i think what it is is there's always the land hunger, the need -- taking over for land, and the indoing nows people are -- indigenous people are vulnerable because they're in isolated areas or places they were sent that suddenly have resources available that others want. for instance, chevron has in, i think, it's costa rica has just covered the people, the land, the water, and the animals in oil so what we think about is the oil in the gulf, but we don't realize that that's happening in other regions as well so it should be published. it should be in papers, and it's very difficult to have that information be out. one book that i read was by hawk ins, and i'm sure you remember him from loping ago, or maybe not, but the same thing is going on in a way that it's not just indigenous people under attack now like you're talking about mountain top removal, the assault on the land is the same thing. i
i was just in norway, and i did a performance with asami person and a woman from india. she's a naga, that's the name of their indigenous nation under attack by the burmese, and i think what it is is there's always the land hunger, the need -- taking over for land, and the indoing nows people are -- indigenous people are vulnerable because they're in isolated areas or places they were sent that suddenly have resources available that others want. for instance, chevron has in, i think, it's costa...
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it's favoritism by parliament for the shareholders of the east india tea company. there's the government being oppressive, the parliament, and i think it's important to understand what the revolution was about for many ordinary patriots was this effort to set up governments of their own, that their problem was that their governments lacked the power to protect the people and promote their prosperity, and that to understand the movement soully as antigovernment is to understand it really halfway and partly from the point of view of thee most well to do who are always the ones who can do without less government, and not from the point of view of the many people who made the revolution happen. thank you. [applause] >> thank you, barbara clark smith. next is john ragosta. >> thank you all for coming. i got started on this project several years back when i was living in coal pepper county, several hours north of here, and i became interested in the coal pepper minutemen, some of barbara's ordinary people, the classic farmers you read about in high school, shoulder the g
it's favoritism by parliament for the shareholders of the east india tea company. there's the government being oppressive, the parliament, and i think it's important to understand what the revolution was about for many ordinary patriots was this effort to set up governments of their own, that their problem was that their governments lacked the power to protect the people and promote their prosperity, and that to understand the movement soully as antigovernment is to understand it really halfway...
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Jul 2, 2011
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he left her in the hood when he bought a crib, 1965, two years before he died because he had gone to india and believed people shouldn't own property. the radical king was a true radical and believed not in possessing personal property, but, look, he borrowed money from his daddy for taxes and harry bell phenomenonity had taken out a $100,000 policy on each of his five kids. so if malcolm had had a benefactor, if he had been langston hughes, so to speak, and could get some of that white harlem dough, he would have a different perspective. even as we deconstruct capital, the point of karl mark deconconstruction -- deconstruction of the capital. when he said, dude, can you take care of my daughter and i believe in ira, individual reparation account. i believe in ira, individual reparations accounts. you can't give it to great, great, great grandpa but you can redistribute wealth towards some of the contemporary people who are inheriting their ideas but it makes it more incumbent upon us to press the argument forward and to tell the truth about the suffering of the masses who don't even have
he left her in the hood when he bought a crib, 1965, two years before he died because he had gone to india and believed people shouldn't own property. the radical king was a true radical and believed not in possessing personal property, but, look, he borrowed money from his daddy for taxes and harry bell phenomenonity had taken out a $100,000 policy on each of his five kids. so if malcolm had had a benefactor, if he had been langston hughes, so to speak, and could get some of that white harlem...
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Jul 31, 2011
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production overseas to less developed and less regulated countries with the bigger workforce such as india and china because it is cheaper. some say that many of these workers primarily agricultural@r villagers would be even poorer@r without the factory jobs, but said that speculation be the@v basis of acceptable corporate practice?@" these conditions are deplorabler what kin@2d of global society@r composed of supposedly empathetic fellow humans cannot value human life over cheap technology that earns millions of dollars to a handful of people. with these huge problems solutions seem few and far between. it is often difficult to create policies that help the most in need, our global system run on monday, little incentive for governments to help those who have nothing to give. governments must act in the best interests of the citizens palin not in the interests of a meager but wealthy minority that funds campaigns and manipulates connections. governments must be held accountable. many of these major problems stem from governments failing to invest money with the best interest of its citizen
production overseas to less developed and less regulated countries with the bigger workforce such as india and china because it is cheaper. some say that many of these workers primarily agricultural@r villagers would be even poorer@r without the factory jobs, but said that speculation be the@v basis of acceptable corporate practice?@" these conditions are deplorabler what kin@2d of global society@r composed of supposedly empathetic fellow humans cannot value human life over cheap...
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Jul 3, 2011
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i mean, india has the nextles which are being more or less hunted down. you've got the native indians in brazil. even in afghanistan, they call the areas where they're doing all the bombing the tribal areas. and i was wondering if you could just speak to the fact that indigenous people all over the world are under attack. and is there some way we can get this out into the press so they can understand that this should be stopped immediately? >> guest: well, what you're saying was true. i was just in norway and did a performance with a sammi person and a notga woman in india who were under attack by the burmese. and what i think it is there's always the land hunger, the taking over for land. and the indigenous people are vulnerable because they're in isolated areas or they're in places that they were sent that suddenly have resources available that others want, for instance, chevron, you know, has been -- i think it's costa rica has just covered the people of the land, the water and all the animals in oil. and so we think about -- what we think about the oi
i mean, india has the nextles which are being more or less hunted down. you've got the native indians in brazil. even in afghanistan, they call the areas where they're doing all the bombing the tribal areas. and i was wondering if you could just speak to the fact that indigenous people all over the world are under attack. and is there some way we can get this out into the press so they can understand that this should be stopped immediately? >> guest: well, what you're saying was true. i...
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Jul 23, 2011
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even in hollywood india being the new black, i'm sorry, we have a unique perspective that no one else has because of our history. and we can write from that perspective. jewish people l have always had the outsider perspective, they have a unique perspective in their humor that they bring everywhere that's unique to their culture. but that's what we have here in america. no one else has our experience. so we can talk about it. we know the white culture better than they know the black culture. i mean, that's another story. there you go, i'm done. nig at night. >> that's a black thought. [laughter] >> jan? >> no, i mean, i would absolutely echo that, and i think, you know, just like it's very interesting how, you know, i look at a show like a "sex in the city," you know, every sister i know we would look at that show, and we would see ourselves in that show, and i know white women who can look at girlfriends and see themselves in that show. like larry was saying, we have these very common experiences, we have a unique perspective, but, you know, women dating and can relationships and lo
even in hollywood india being the new black, i'm sorry, we have a unique perspective that no one else has because of our history. and we can write from that perspective. jewish people l have always had the outsider perspective, they have a unique perspective in their humor that they bring everywhere that's unique to their culture. but that's what we have here in america. no one else has our experience. so we can talk about it. we know the white culture better than they know the black culture. i...
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Jul 4, 2011
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india, any calendar year 1944 when the germans produced 40,000 more points, the russians another 40,000, and britain produced 28,000, in that same year the united states produced no fewer than 98,000 warplanes, almost as much as the rest of the world put together. it's an unpaid bill country. it was obviously an act of lunatic hubris to have declared war against you, and it was done for ideological reasons. equally, the complete coordination with japan is an astonishing -- in hitler's strategic vision. had the japanese attacked from the east at the same time that he was attacking from the west in june 1941, there's a good chance that in october of that year the 16 siberian divisions would not have been able to have rolled across the euros to defend moscow at that key moment. only 16, 1941, stalin had his personal train made ready to take him back to katzenberg or even further back, just imagine the demoralization if that would have gotten out. if the germans got within 40 miles of the moscow subway system, it was incredibly close. up in the north, the siege of leningrad, a grueling 980
india, any calendar year 1944 when the germans produced 40,000 more points, the russians another 40,000, and britain produced 28,000, in that same year the united states produced no fewer than 98,000 warplanes, almost as much as the rest of the world put together. it's an unpaid bill country. it was obviously an act of lunatic hubris to have declared war against you, and it was done for ideological reasons. equally, the complete coordination with japan is an astonishing -- in hitler's strategic...
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Jul 3, 2011
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when he founded funny bought a crate of 19652 and half years before he died because he had gone to india and believe that people shouldn't own property. so when you start talking about the radical king, what a true radical and believe not in possessing personal property but look he borrowed money from his daddy for texas and harry belafonte had taken out a 100,000-dollar policy and life insurance only to the five kids. this is what professor harris-perry is saying so if malcolm had a benefactor if he had been langston hughes so to speak and could get some of that white harlem dough, then he would have had a different perspective so even as we deconstruct capital, the point of karl marx the construction of capital didn't mitigate against existential assertion of the value and worth of capital, because karl marx said that. can you take care of my daughter? so i believe in either a, it individual reparations accounts. [laughter] and i believe in i.r.a., individual reparation accounts. you can't give us a great great great grandpa but you can redistribute wealth toward some of the contempora
when he founded funny bought a crate of 19652 and half years before he died because he had gone to india and believe that people shouldn't own property. so when you start talking about the radical king, what a true radical and believe not in possessing personal property but look he borrowed money from his daddy for texas and harry belafonte had taken out a 100,000-dollar policy and life insurance only to the five kids. this is what professor harris-perry is saying so if malcolm had a benefactor...